| Literature DB >> 22870238 |
Jacobien Veenemans1, Laura R A Schouten, Maarten J Ottenhof, Theo G Mank, Donald R A Uges, Erasto V Mbugi, Ayşe Y Demir, Rob J Kraaijenhagen, Huub F J Savelkoul, Hans Verhoef.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The efficacy of preventive zinc supplementation against diarrhea and respiratory illness may depend on simultaneous supplementation with other micronutrients. We aimed to assess the effect of supplementation with zinc and multiple micronutrients on diarrhea and other causes of non-malarial morbidity. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22870238 PMCID: PMC3411720 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0041630
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Target dose and form of multi-nutrient supplement (including zinc).
| Active substance | Target level | Form | Infants 6–12 months | Children 1–3 years | Children 4–5 years | |||||
| Declared | Overage | Formulated | RNI | UL | RNI | UL | RNI | UL | ||
| Vitamin A | 300 µg RAE | 50% | 450 µg RAE | All- | 400 µg | 600 µg | 400 µg | 600 µg | 450 µg | 900 µg |
| Vitamin B1 | 0.5 mg | 25% | 0.625 mg | Thiamin mononitrate | 0.3 mg | ND | 0.5 mg | ND | 0.6 mg | ND |
| Vitamin B2 | 0.5 mg | 10% | 0.55 mg | Riboflavin | 0.4 mg | ND | 0.5 mg | ND | 0.6 mg | ND |
| Niacin | 6 mg NE | 10% | 6.6 mg | Niacin | 4 NE | ND | 6 NE | 10 mg | 8 NE | 15 mg |
| Vitamin B6 | 0.5 mg | 15% | 0.575 mg | Pyridoxine | 0.3 mg | ND | 0.5 mg | 30 mg | 0.6 mg | 40 mg |
| Folate | 150 µg DFE | 25% | 93.75 µg | Folic acid | 80 µg | ND | 160 µg | 300 µg DFE | 200 µg | 400 µg DFE |
| Vitamin B12 | 0.9 µg | 30% | 1.17 µg | Cyanocobalamid in mannitol | 0.5 µg | ND | 0.9 µg | ND | 1.2 µg | ND |
| Vitamin C | 50 mg | 50% | 75 mg | Purified L-ascorbic acid | 30 mg | ND | 30 mg | 400 mg | 30 mg | 650 mg |
| Vitamin D | 5 µg | 35% | 6.75 µg | Vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) | 5 µg | 25 µg | 5 µg | 50 µg | 5 µg | 50 µg |
| Vitamin E | 6 mg TE | 10% | 6.6 mg | RRR- | 0.6 mg/kg bw|| | ND | 6 mg|| | 200 mg | 7 mg|| | 300 mg |
| Vitamin K | 30 µg | 50% | 45 µg | Phylloquinone (vitamin K1) 5% | 10 µg | ND | 15 µg | ND | 20 µg | ND |
| Zinc | 10 mg | 0% | 10 mg | Zinc as gluconate | 8.4 mg | 5 mg | 8.3 mg | 7 mg | 9.6 mg | 12 mg |
| Iron | 18 mg | 0% | 18 mg | Ferrous fumarate | 18.6 mg | 40 mg | 11.6 mg | 40 mg | 12.6 mg | 40 mg |
| Iodine | 90 µg | 0% | 90 µg | Potassium iodate | 90 µg | ND | 90 µg | 200 µg | 90 µg | 300 µg |
| Copper | 340 µg | 0% | 340 µg | Cupric gluconate | 220 µg 5 | ND | 340 µg 5 | 1 mg | 440 µg 5 | 3 mg |
| Selenium | 20 µg | 0% | 20 µg | Sodium selenate | 10 µg | 60 µg | 17 µg | 90 µg | 22 µg | 150 µg |
| Magnesium | 65 mg | 0% | 65 mg | Trimagnesium dicitrate anhydrous | 54 mg | ND | 60 mg | 65 mg | 76 mg | 110 mg |
RNI: Recommended Nutrient Intake as established by WHO/FAO [8]; UL: Tolerable Upper Intake Level as established by FNB/IOM [23]; RAE: retinol activity equivalents; NE: niacin equivalents; DFE: dietary folate equivalents; TE: α-tocopherol equivalents; ND: Not derived.
Overage is calculated from declared amount (D) and formulated amount (F) as O = (F-D)*100/D.
Equivalent to 1,500 IU.
Based on IOM estimates that 0.5 µg folic acid taken on an empty stomach corresponds to 1 µg DFE.
Equivalent to 270 IU.
Values obtained from [18).
UL applies to supplementary Mg.
Figure 1Trial profile.
Compliance was measured as the proportion of children who consumed.95% of scheduled supplements.
Baseline characteristics of study participants, by intervention group.
| Zinc | Multi-nutrients without zinc | Multi-nutrients with zinc | Placebo | |||||
| N | 153 | 155 | 151 | 153 | ||||
| Sex M/F [n/n] | 70/83 | [46%/54%] | 87/68 | [56%/44%] | 66/85 | [44%/56%] | 76/77 | [50%/50%] |
| Age | 32.5 | (15.4) | 32.2 | (15.7) | 32.5 | (15.5) | 32.7 | (16.1) |
|
| 66 | [43%] | 64 | [41%] | 67 | [44%] | 68 | [44%] |
| Height-for-age, z-score | –2·36 | (0·69) | –2·50 | (0·69) | –2·39 | (0·71) | –2·45 | (0·69) |
| Inflammation | 52 | [34%] | 51 | [33%] | 51 | [34%] | 47 | [31%] |
|
| 50 | [33%] | 54 | [35%] | 42 | [28%] | 46 | [30%] |
| Zinc deficiency | 97 | [63%] | 110 | [71%] | 105 | [70%] | 100 | [65%] |
| Iron deficiency|| | 23 | [23%] | 25 | [24%] | 24 | [24%] | 25 | [24%] |
| Hemoglobin concentration, g/L | 101·8 | (12·6) | 102·7 | (12·8) | 103·8 | (12·7) | 102.8 | (12·7) |
| Distance from homestead to dispensary, km | 3·66 | (2·31) | 3·52 | (2·06) | 3·54 | (2·07) | 3·60 | (3·38) |
| Mosquito net use | 48 | [32%] | 55 | [36%] | 45 | [30%] | 46 | [31%] |
Mean (SD), % [n] unless indicated otherwise.
As indicated by a positive result for pLDH-based dipstick test (see text).
Plasma C-reactive protein concentration ≥8 mg/L.
Stool samples could not be analyzed for 54 children (with 13, 14, 15 and 12 missing values in the 4 intervention groups). Prevalence calculated with total group numbers in denominator.
Plasma zinc concentration <9.9 µmol/L.
Plasma ferritin concentration <12 µg/L (6 missing values); restricted to children without inflammation at baseline (n = 101, 104, 100 and 106, respectively).
Measured as the crow flies, based on global positioning data.
Data missing for 11 children.
Figure 2Effect of supplementation with zinc (left panel) or multi-nutrients (right panel) on selected morbidity outcomes.
The effect of zinc was assessed by hazard ratios in the pooled groups receiving zinc (with or without multi-nutrients) versus the pooled groups receiving no zinc (with or without multi-nutrients); the effect of multi-nutrients was assessed by hazard ratios in the pooled groups receiving multi-nutrients versus the pooled groups receiving placebo or zinc. Values between brackets (left) indicate the number of episodes for each illness definition. Horizontal line bars indicate 95% CIs. Estimates are adjusted for age class (indicated by dummies) and distance between homestead and research dispensary (< or ≥4 km); further adjustment for mosquito net use, sex, plasma zinc concentration, iron status or inflammation at baseline did not markedly change the effect estimates.
Incidence rates for various illnesses, stratified by the presence of fever.
| All | Fever reported | No fever reported | ||||
| Total observation time, child-years | 526 | 526 | 526 | |||
| All clinic visits | 6.2 | (3,268) | 4.7 | (2,462) | 1.5 | (806) |
| Diarrhea | ||||||
| Guardian-reported episodes | 0.74 | (390) | 0.47 | (248) | 0.27 | (142) |
| >3 loose stools/24 h | 0.44 | (233) | 0.41 | (216) | 0.03 | (17) |
| Respiratory illness | ||||||
| Cough | 2.5 | (1,333) | 1.9 | (998) | 0.64 | (334) |
| Cough with fast breathing | 0.34 | (181) | 0.28 | (147) | 0.06 | (34) |
| Severe pneumonia | 0.05 | (24) | 0.04 | (20) | 0.01 | (4) |
| Other illnesses | 1.4 | (744) | 0.68 | (3,566) | 0.74 | (388) |
| Fever without localizing signs | 0.44 | (232) | NA | NA | ||
| Malaria | 3.0 | (1,572) | NA | NA | ||
| Hospital referrals | 0.13 | (68) | 0.13 | (68) | 0.00 | (0) |
Values indicate the total number of episodes per child-year observed. Numbers between brackets indicate the number of episodes.
NA: Not applicable (fever is part of the case definition).
Among these, the following number of cases was also classified as malaria: reported diarrhea: 137 (35%); reported diarrhea with ≥3 loose stools/24 h: 69 (30%); reported cough: 491 (36%); other: 166 (22%).
Includes symptoms of skin, ears, and eyes and abscesses; excluding trauma or burns.
Cases classified as fever without localizing signs are not included in any of the other categories.
Incidence of various illnesses, by treatment group.
| Zinc | Multi-nutrients without zinc | Multi-nutrients with zinc | Placebo | Interaction effect | p | ||||||
| Child-years at risk | 130.8 | 133.2 | 129.7 | 131.9 | |||||||
| Diarrhea | |||||||||||
| All reported episodes | 0.62 | (81) | 0.92 | (123) | 0.67 | (87) | 0.75 | (99) | 0.88 | (0.52–1.51) | 0.65 |
| >3 loose stools/24 h | 0.35 | (46) | 0.56 | (74) | 0.42 | (55) | 0.44 | (58) | 0.96 | (0.51–1.80) | 0.89 |
| Respiratory illness | |||||||||||
| Cough | 2.5 | (322) | 2.5 | (333) | 2.7 | (354) | 2.5 | (324) | 1.09 | (0.80–1.48) | 0.57 |
| Cough with fast breathing | 0.34 | (45) | 0.32 | (43) | 0.39 | (50) | 0.33 | (43) | 1.13 | (0.57–2.24) | 0.72 |
| Other | 1.5 | (195) | 1.4 | (186) | 1.3 | (169) | 1.5 | (194) | 0.92 | (0.62–1.37) | 0.68 |
| Fever without localizing signs | 0.39 | (51) | 0.45 | (60) | 0.37 | (48) | 0.55 | (73) | 1.17 | (0.66–2.06) | 0.60 |
Values indicate the total number of episodes per child-year observed. Numbers between brackets indicate the number of cases.
Measured in a Cox proportional hazard model as the hazard ratio associated with the interaction term between zinc and multi-nutrients.
Figure 3Subgroup analysis of effects of supplementation with zinc or multi-nutrients on diarrhea (top panels) and fever without localizing signs (bottom panels).
Effects are indicated by hazard ratios (see Figure 2), with p-values for interaction tests. Values between brackets (left) indicate the number of children in each subgroup. Horizontal line bars indicate 95% CIs. Effects are adjusted for age class, being stunted and distance (< or ≥4 km) unless these factors were used to define subgroups. Because the presence of Giardia infection could not be assessed in 54 children due to missing stool samples, the analysis is based on fewer cases of diarrhea (361) and fever without localizing signs (216) than reported in the text.